Paris Reidhead: Ten Shekels and a Shirt – Humanism and Self  

Posted by Jeff in

Continuing with my thoughts on the issue of self. I came across Paris Reidhead's message "Ten Shekels and a Shirt" a few weeks ago via the Revival Hymn (which is awesome; if you haven't listened to it yet, I encourage you to do so). There's a good chunk of this message in the Revival Hymn, but the whole thing is well worth listening to also. It's available at SermonIndex.net.

The following excerpt gives a very strong summary of the philosophy of humanism and how humanism has permeated the Church. The disaster of humanism is that self became exalted in the very place it was supposed to be killed. Under the influence of humanist thinking and a humanist Zeitgeist ("spirit of the age"), the American Church began to invite people to Jesus by appealing to self. And what do you end up with?

A speaker I heard last year put it this way: "We've got a bunch of unconverted people sitting in purpose-driven pews hearing a seeker-sensitive Gospel about 'your best life now!'"

Excerpt from Ten Shekels and a Shirt (Message Transcript)

…The philosophy of the day became humanism. And you could define humanism this way, humanism is a philosophical statement that declares the end of all being is the happiness of man. The reason for existence is man's happiness. Now according to humanism, salvation is simply a matter of getting all the happiness you can out of life. If you're influenced by someone like Nietzsche who says that the only true satisfaction in life is power and that the power is its own justification, and that after all the world is a jungle. And it is therefore up to the man to be happy, to become powerful, and become powerful by any means he can use. For it is only in this position of ascendancy or as we saw in the worship of Molech that one can be happy. This would produce in due course a Hitler who would take the philosophy of Nietzsche as his working operating principles and guide and would say of his people that we are destined to rule the world. Therefore any means that we can use to
achieve this is our salvation.

Somebody else turns around and says, "Well no, the end of being is happiness, but happiness doesn't come from authority over people, happiness comes from sensual experience." So you would have the type of existentialism that characterizes France today, that's given rise to beatnikism in America and to the gross sensuality of our country. Since man is essentially a glandular animal who's highest moments of ecstasy come from the exercise of his glands, salvation is simply to find the most desirable way to gratify this part of a person.

And so this became the effect of humanism, that the end of all being is the happiness of man. John Dewey, then an American philosopher influencing education, was able to persuade the educators that there were no absolute standards. Children shouldn't be brought to any particular standard, that the end of education was simply to allow the child to express himself and expand on what he is and find his happiness in being what he wants to be. So we had cultural lawlessness, when every man could do as seemed right in his own eyes and we had no God to rule over us. The Bible had been discounted and disallowed and disproved according to what they said. God had been dethroned, He didn't exist, He had no personal relationship to individuals. Jesus Christ was either a myth or just a man, so they taught, and therefore the whole end of being was happiness. The individual would establish the standards of his happiness and interpret it.

LIBERAL, FUNDAMENTAL or...NEITHER?

Now religion then had to exist because there were so many people that made their living at it, so they had to find some way to justify their existence. So back about the time, in 1850, the church divided into two groups. The one group was the liberals, who accepted the philosophy of the humanism and tried to find some relevance by saying something like this to their generation, "Ha, ha, we don't know there's a heaven. We don't know there's a hell. But we do know this, that you've got to live for 70 years! We know there's a great deal of benefit from poetry, from high thoughts and noble aspirations. Therefore it's important for you to come to church on Sunday, so that we can read some poetry, that we can give you some little adages and axioms and rules to live by. We can't say anything about what's going to happen when you die, but we'll tell you this, if you'll come every week and pay and help and stay with us, we'll put springs on your wagon and your trip will be more comfortable. We can't guarantee anything about what's going to happen when you die, but we say that if you come along with us, we'll make you happier while you're alive". And so this became the essence of liberalism. It has simply nothing more than to try and put a little sugar in the bitter coffee of their journey and sweeten it up for a time. This is all that it could say.

Well now the philosophy of the atmosphere is humanism; the chief end of being is the happiness of man. There's another group of people that have taken umbrage with the liberals, this group are my people, the fundamentalists. They say, "We believe in the inspiration of the Bible! We believe in the deity of Jesus Christ! We believe in hell! We believe in heaven! We believe in the death, burial, and resurrection of Christ!" But remember the atmosphere is that of humanism. And humanism says the chief end of being is the happiness of man. Humanism is like a miasma out of a pit, it just permeates everyplace. Humanism is like an infection, an epidemic, it just goes everywhere. So it wasn't long until we had this, that the fundamentalists knew each other because they said "We believe these things!" They were men for the most part that had met God.

But you see it wasn't long until having said "These are the things that establish us as fundamentalists!", the second generation said "This is how we become a fundamentalist! Believe in the inspiration of the Bible! Believe in the deity of Christ! Believe in His death, burial, and resurrection! And thereby become a fundamentalist". And so it wasn't long until it got to our generation, where the whole plan of salvation was to give intellectual assent to a few statements of doctrine. And a person was considered a Christian because he could say "Uh huh" at four or five places that he was asked. If he knew where to say "Uh huh", someone would pat him on the back, shake his hand, smile broadly, and say "Brother, you're saved!" So it had gotten down to the place where salvation was nothing more than an assent to a scheme or a formula, and the end of this was that salvation was the happiness of man because humanism has penetrated. If you were to analyze fundamentalism in contrast to liberalism of a hundred years ago as it developed, for I am not pinpointing it in time, it would be like this:

The liberal says the end of religion is to make man happy while he's alive, and the fundamentalist says the end of religion is to make man happy when he dies.

But again! The end of all of the religion it was proclaimed was the happiness of man. And whereas the liberal says, "By social change and political order we're going to do away with funds, we're going to do away with alcoholism and dope addiction and poverty. And we're going to make HEAVEN ON EARTH! AND MAKE YOU HAPPY WHILE YOU'RE ALIVE! We don't know  anything about after that, but we want you to be happy while you're alive!" They went ahead to try and do it only to be brought to a terrifying shock at the first World War and utterly staggered by the second World War, because they seemed to be getting nowhere fast.

And then the fundamentalists, along the same line, are now tuning in along this same wavelength of humanism. Until we find it something like this:

"Accept Jesus so you can go to heaven! you don't want to go to that old, filthy, nasty, burning hell when there is a beautiful heaven up there! now come to Jesus so you can go to heaven!"

And the appeal could be as much to selfishness as a couple of men sitting in a coffee shop deciding they are going to rob a bank to get something for nothing! There's a way that you can give an invitation to sinners, that just sounds for all the world like a plot to take up a filling station proprietor's Saturday night earnings without working for them.

Humanism is, I believe, the most deadly and disastrous of all the philosophical stenches that's crept up through the grating over the pit of Hell. It has penetrated so much of our religion. AND IT IS IN UTTER AND TOTAL CONTRAST WITH CHRISTIANITY! Unfortunately it's seldom seen. And here we find Micah, wants to have a little chapel, and he wants to have a priest, and he wants to have prayer, and he wants to have devotion,  because "I KNOW THE LORD WILL DO ME GOOD!" AND THIS IS SELFISHNESS !!! AND THIS IS SIN !!! And the Levite comes along and falls right in with it! Because he wants a place! He wants ten shekels and a shirt and his food! And so in order that he can have what he wants, and Micah can have what they want, THEY SELL OUT GOD! For ten shekels and a shirt. AND THIS IS THE BETRAYAL OF THE AGES !!! And it is the betrayal in which we live. And I don't see HOW GOD CAN REVIVE IT! Until we come back to Christianity. As in DIRECT AND TOTAL CONTRAST WITH THE STENCHFUL HUMANISM that's perpetrated in our generation in the name of Christ.

I'm afraid that it's become so subtle that it goes everywhere. What is it? In essence it's this! That this philosophical postulate that the end of all being is the happiness of man, has been sort of covered over with evangelical terms and Biblical doctrine until God reigns in heaven for the happiness of man, Jesus Christ was incarnate for the happiness of man, all the angels exist in the..., Everything is for the happiness of man! AND I SUBMIT TO YOU THAT THIS IS UNCHRISTIAN !!! Isn't man happy? Didn't God intend to make man happy? Yes. But as a by-product and not a prime-product!

This entry was posted on Thursday, December 06, 2007 at 6:27 PM and is filed under . You can follow any responses to this entry through the comments feed .

2 comments

I have great respect and take great insight from this blog...but I was wondering ...what do you think of the statement by Hans Kung which simply says that "Christianity is really just radical humanism."

Because perhaps it isn't that humanism is so self-involved or wrong, but rather that we have forgotten what it means to be human, and Jesus himself came to show us how to be more human. I do understand that being supremly concerned with only "man's happiness" is idolatry, but at the same time I do believe that man's needs/concerns coincide with God's concerns...meaning that I think he is concerned with our happiness, perhaps not at the expense of our holiness...but to go back to the earlier quote, "radical" means root...so what Kung is saying is that what is means to follow Christ is at its core the root meaning of being human, and God is chiefly concerned with that being. . .so much so that he sent his only son to endure and experience everything as we do.

I agree that humanism has it's faults, as do many other hedonistic geared philosophies and concepts that many people-- christian and non christians fall into in our world today, however I just think we need to re-define or not even re-define humanism but get back to what it means to be human, and we will find God's glory and praise stamped upon it.

good post though, sorry if I just picked at one thing and deviated from your whole message, i was just thinking and thought that I would share.

12:24 AM

Shanon,

Thanks for your comment and your encouraging words. It's nice to know that some people are reading and are finding valuable things here.

I haven't read Kung, so I'm not really qualified to respond to his quote out of its context, but I do have one thought:

I would agree with the idea that Christianity is radical humanism (or the true humanism) - really, the very best thing that can be done for humanity is precisely what God did for us. He became one of us, taught us what humanity was supposed to be, and then redeemed us to reopen the door to our full potential as His appointed regents on the earth.

As with almost everything else in the universe, Jesus did indeed redefine what it means to be human. He redefined what it means to be powerful. He redefined what it means to be wise. He redefined what it means to be happy. It is literally impossible to exaggerate the significance of the Incarnation and the life, death, resurrection, ascension, and soon return of Jesus Christ.

I would take issue with the quote, however, in regard to the word "just." Is Christianity just radical humanism? Is it just the true way for humanity to come into our full potential and happiness? No. As Reidhead pointed out, in the last line of excerpt above, humanity's happiness is absolutely a part of God's plan. But it is NOT the primary objective of God's plan. The primary objective of God's plan is His glory.

The practical significance of this distinction is what happens when we face pain and suffering. How do we understand suffering? What is our framework for understanding persecution and martyrdom? And most of all, how do we react to the idea that God - in His love, His wisdom, and His righteous jealousy - kills people and sends them to Hell in judgment for their sin?

We are in danger of badly misinterpreting life - in fact, we are in danger of nurturing an offense against God that literally results in disaster - if we center our interpretation of life on human beings.

Life is about God. Pain, persecution, and judgment - as well as joy, peace, and salvation - make complete sense only when we believe that "of Him and through Him and to Him are all things, to whom be glory forever." (Rom 11:36)

7:18 PM

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